Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Missinaibi River is a river in northern Ontario, Canada, which flows northeast from Missinaibi Lake, north of Chapleau, and empties into the Moose River, which drains into James Bay. This river (including Missinaibi Lake and Moose River to James Bay) is 755 kilometres (469 mi) in length.
Missinaibi River. Brunswick River; Fire River. Nebotik River. ... Little Clive River (Ontario) [citation needed] Boivin River (Quebec) Samson River (Quebec) Plamondon ...
Missinaibi Lake (Cree: masinâpôy sâkahikan, ᒪᓯᓈᐴᔾ ᓵᑲᐦᐃᑲᐣ) is a lake in Ontario, Canada, [1] about 60 kilometres (37 mi) north of Chapleau.It is the source of the Missinaibi River, which drains the lake at the northeastern point and flows northeastward into the Moose River. [2]
The municipality has also erected a sculpture depicting a voyageur portaging along the river. Mattice is home to a historical First Nations cemetery, located two kilometers south of town. It had been abandoned in the 1940s but has now been cleaned up and can be accessed by road or by canoe on the Missinaibi River.
The Mattagami then flows into the Moose; it is at the meeting of the Missinaibi and Mattagami rivers that the Moose river begins, marked by an island known as Portage Island. This point is about two or three days travel by canoe to Moosonee. Though the Missinaibi and the Groundhog are both fairly high in the summer, the Moose is often quite low.
After the completion of 2 more east-west railways through northern Ontario (the Canadian Northern Railway and the National Transcontinental Railway) in 1912, the inland HBC posts along the Missinaibi River were no longer needed, and the Missanabie post became more important as HBC's supply hub, taking over this role from Moose Factory. On June ...
The Fire River is a river in Algoma District in northeastern Ontario, Canada. [1] It is in the James Bay drainage basin , and is a left tributary of the Missinaibi River . Course
St. Raphael Provincial Park is a provincial park in northern Ontario, Canada, roughly halfway between Sioux Lookout and Pickle Lake, straddling the boundary of Kenora and Thunder Bay Districts. [1] It was established on May 22, 2003, and provides backcountry canoeing and camping opportunities. [2] [3]